Sophie Neiman and Guy Peterson report on how starvation is being used as a weapon in Sudan’s war. Halima Sulieman Jibreel prepares to break her Ramadan fast at a displacement camp in the Nuba ...
The West’s attempts to position the Iranian monarch’s son as a ‘credible’ alternative to the Khamenei regime isn’t resonating domestically, argues Peiman Salehi. The devastating fallout of the joint ...
Mariam Barghouti reflects on what it means when communities built on hospitality can no longer support their neighbours. Letter From is one of New Internationalist’s longest running columns.
Lydia Godden is a freelance journalist and community energy professional. Originally from the South Wales Valleys, her work focuses on energy justice, the development of post-neoliberal economies and ...
Secretive and ruthless, the traffickers controlling the kidney trade thrive on the desperation of the poor and the sick. Nancy Scheper-Hughes lays bare the ‘collateral damage’. The slide on the screen ...
Beyond the sensationalist headlines, Obiora Ikoku finds a deeply rooted crisis, made worse by the country’s ruling elite. Nine months ago, Rita Gendaga was preparing for her late father’s funeral when ...
Don Kevin Hapal unmasks the hidden workforce driving the Philippines’ flourishing disinformation ecosystem. When one thinks of disinformation, what first comes to mind? Many might imagine ...
Radical organizing was once backed up by a network of physical spaces. How can we rebuild them to support the movements we need now? By Rosie Hampton. If you needed somewhere to meet for left-wing ...
An oil boom is reshaping Guyana’s future. Ben Jacob traces the country’s long history of colonial exploitation from Britain’s sugar factory to Exxon’s oil fields. Georgetown, the capital city of ...
Carmen Herrera traces the history of the Sandinista National Liberation Front, from socialist liberators to ‘institutional dictators’, under the increasingly brutal rule of Daniel Ortega A mural of ...
Eiad Husham traces the UAE’s long game for access to the Red Sea – a strategy built through ports, airports and infrastructure projects, and driven by ambitions to secure maritime power and regional ...
It was a movement that reverberated on campuses from Cape Town to Oxford. Musawenkosi Cabe speaks to activists who were part of the high-profile push to decolonize universities and challenge white ...